186 Ga. 116 | Ga. | 1938
McCall filed a petition against Burney, alleging that petitioner is a share cropper on land belonging to Mrs. Susan E. Burney, wife of the defendant, having made a contract as such share cropper through the defendant as her agent; that the defendant, acting for his wife, furnished certain supplies to petitioner, and refuses to advise petitioner how his account for such supplies stands, or to make an accounting to petitioner; that defendant collected, as hail insurance on the four acres of tobacco hereinabove referred to, the sum of $168.88 in cash, having paid
The defendant filed a general demurrer to the petition. Thp court overruled the demurrer. In his answer the defendant denied the material averments of the petition, and in reply to the allegations as to the hail insurance collected on the tobacco crop said: “Defendant admits paragraph seven of said petition, in that he collected $268.88 for hail insurance, but denies being indebted to the plaintiff in any amount because of this action concerning hail insurance; defendant denies owing plaintiff the sum of $134.44 or any amount. Defendant shows in this connection that the said plaintiff refused to have any tobacco insured, tho he was prevailed on so to do, and further shows that the said plaintiff has never been charged with any insurance premiums since he refused to have anything to do with insuring said tobacco; defendant further shows that the plaintiff did tell him ‘I
Upon the trial the following facts were agreed to by counsel for the parties: “In 1936 the defendant John Burney took out hail insurance covering the four acres of tobacco set out in petition; that said tobacco was destroyed by hail, and the said defendant collected $268.88 on insurance policy; that the said defendant paid the insurance premium and charged none of it to the plaintiff, who was a half cropper; that Mrs. J. H. Burney was the landlord and owned the land and crops, and that defendant was acting as her agent. All the balance of the crops was divided between plaintiff and defendant.” On this statement and the admissions in the pleadings the judge directed a verdict in favor of the plaintiff for $134.44 insurance money, less $10, half the premium paid for the policy. By bill of exceptions the defendant assigns error on the overruling of his demurrer to the petition, and on the direction of the verdict and judgment.
Whether or not the petition alleged facts which would have authorized an accounting as against Mrs. Burney, with whom the plaintiff entered into a contract as a cropper, he expressly disclaims any intention to sue her, but proceeds solely against her husband, who was a disclosed and known agent at the time the contract was made and at the time of all the transactions set out in the petition. It follows that the plaintiff did not show any cause of action as against the defendant.
The verdict in the plaintiff’s favor was erroneous, not only for the reason just stated, but for the additional reason that he failed entirely to establish any right to a share of the insurance collected on the policy of hail insurance taken out by the defendant. The statement in the defendant’s answer that the plaintiff refused to take out such insurance, being established by uncontradieted evidence, negatived any right which the plaintiff might otherwise have had to a share in such insurance. The court erred in directing the verdict in plaintiff’s favor for one half the amount of insurance collected, less one half the amount of premium paid.
Judgment reversed.